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Australia: SEP public meetings launch NSW state election campaign
By our reporters
6 March 2007
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The Socialist Equality Party opened its campaign last week
for the March 24 state elections in New South Wales with public
meetings in Sydney and in the regional working class city of Newcastle.
SEP national secretary Nick Beams, who is heading the partys
slate of 15 candidates for the Legislative Council (upper house),
spoke at all three events along with SEP candidates for the Legislative
AssemblyJames Cogan for the southeastern Sydney seat of
Heffron, Patrick OConnor for the inner-west seat of Marrickville
and Noel Holt in Newcastlewho addressed their respective
electorate meetings.
Attended by workers, students and youth, the meetings generated
lively discussions on a range of political issuesfrom the
escalating US-led military aggression in the Middle East, to growing
social inequality and attacks on basic democratic rights, to the
tasks posed by the collapse of the traditional working class parties
and organisations. The discussions again underscored that while
there is widespread and profound disgust with the major parties
and a lack of interest in the official campaign, many people are
disturbed by, and seeking to grapple with, broader political and
historical questions.
Nick Beams reviewed US preparations for war against Iran and
the speech delivered by US Vice President Dick Cheney during his
recent visit to Australia. The SEP national secretary explained
that behind Cheneys deranged ranting about the prospect
of a Muslim Caliphate, or empire being
established across much of the globe was a definite logic. He
was expressing the desperation of a waning imperialist power to
offset its economic decline through military forcethe seizure
of Middle East oil and gas resourcesaimed primarily against
its rivals. Beams outlined the historical dimensions of the crisis
of US imperialism and elaborated the international socialist program
needed to prevent the outbreak of a third global inter-imperialist
war (See Socialism and the struggle
against US militarism ).
SEP Legislative Assembly (lower house) candidates used the
meetings to explain key aspects of the partys program. The
candidates related their own political experiences and the reasons
why they had decided to join the Trotskyist movement. Their reports
demonstrated the pernicious role of protest politics, and the
extent of the degeneration of the Labor Party and unions over
the past three decades.
James Cogan told the Heffron public meeting that he joined
the Socialist Labour League, the forerunner of the SEP, in early
1991, out of disgust with the anti-working class policies of the
Hawke and Keating Labor governments and their endorsement of the
first US war on Iraq.
He quoted from a statement issued by the International Committee
of the Fourth International (ICFI) at the time and detailed the
bloody impact of the 1990-91 war and the economic sanctions that
were implemented in its aftermath on the Iraqi people. Cogan warned
that the carnage being planned against Iran would see even greater
devastation than had been experienced over the past five years
in Iraq and Afghanistan as a result of the US-led invasions.
We live in a time where there is open discussion that
nuclear weapons will be used for the first time since the bombing
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he said.
The SEP candidate reviewed the lessons of the antiwar protests
in 1990-91 and 2003, in which the Greens, Socialist Alliance and
others argued that mass pressure could, via the UN or other official
channels, prevent the US from going to war. These claims, he said,
sowed political complacency among workers and students and prevented
them from understanding the necessity for an independent struggle
and perspective.
Cogan pointed to the Greens endorsement of anti-terror
laws in Australia and their support for the mobilisation of Australian
troops in East Timor and the South Pacific. He warned the audience:
If you are opposed to militarism and inequality, do not
be diverted behind organisations that have no perspective of challenging
the causethe profit system.
At the Marrickville meeting, Patrick OConnor dealt with
the Australian military operations in the South Pacific. He explained
that these were taking on an openly colonial character
and pointed out that Howard told the media last December that
Australian people should get used to at least 10 to 20 years of
military operations in the region.
The Australian ruling elite views the Pacific as its
sphere of influence, he said, and is determined to
use military force to ensure that rival powers, above all China,
do not gain geo-strategic influence and secure markets and resources
in the areas that were previously dominated by Australian corporations.
OConnor reviewed recent Australian interventions in the
Solomon Islands and East Timor and the response of the so-called
antiwar parties to these developments.
If one wishes to check the antiwar credentials of these
parties there is no better place to begin than by examining their
position on the Howard governments operations in the South
Pacific. Such an examination reveals that every parliamentary
party, without exception, fully backs Howards actions. Labor,
Democrats, and the Greens have all lined up behind the government,
he said.
OConnor reminded the meeting of the critical role played
by the Greens and the Socialist Alliance in backing the Howard
governments first intervention in East Timor in 1999. Howard
quickly seized upon the pretext of humanitarian intervention,
as claimed by these organisations, and has utilised the same justification
to throw Australias weight around the region ever since.
Noel Holt, a retired Telstra worker and former Central Coast
president and state branch councillor of the Communication, Electrical
and Plumbing Union, told the Newcastle meeting that the eruption
of militarism was the most graphic illustration that the
capitalist system has failed.
We are told that people are concerned only with local
issues, he said. If this is true then my colleagues
and I must be talking to the wrong people. We find that an overwhelming
majority of ordinary people are sickened by the death and destruction
being carried out by the US-led coalition forces in Iraq and strongly
condemn support for the war by Labor and Liberal.
Holt told the meeting that he had been an active participant
in the Labor Party and the unions during his working life but
became deeply disillusioned with the betrayals of working people
by these organisations. He reviewed Labors record in office
and, in particular, the ruthless assault on jobs and living standards
during the 13 years of Hawke and Keating federal Labor governments.
The SEP candidate said he came into sharp conflict with the union
bureaucracy over his determination to challenge the ACTU/Labor
accord and Enterprise Bargaining Agreements.
After quitting the Labor Party, Holt said that he had many
unanswered questions about why Labor and the unions had
failed the working class. Fortunately, I met the Socialist
Labour League (now the SEP). It was not this or that leader, the
party explained to me, but their program and perspective of reformism
that failed the working class, he declared.
At each of the meetings, audience members took the opportunity
to ask a range of questions and add their own comments. Questions
covered the current turmoil on world share markets, the long-term
implications of American military interventions in the Middle
East and Central Asia, why capitalism caused poverty, and why
the Greens had backed the electoral legislation that restricted
the SEP and other parties from registering.
In Heffron, a worker commented at length on the role of US
and European oil and petro-chemical companies during the twentieth
century, suggesting that the lesson that had to be drawn was how
powerful they were. This provoked important discussion.
SEP members pointed out that the twentieth century was not
simply a period of big-business conspiracies, but of tremendous
class conflict and revolutionary struggles. They explained that
the primary lessons that had to be drawn was how and why those
struggles had been betrayed and defeated. The most crucial questionthen
and nowwas the necessity for the development of revolutionary
consciousness in the working class.
After the meetings, WSWS reporters interviewed some of those
who attended.
Larissa, who has joined the International Students for Social
Equality (ISSE) at Newcastle University, said: Hearing Nick
Beams speak reminded me of the issues that face the world today
and which Im concerned about. The meeting has inspired me
to get involved and not take a back seat, and to understand that
there isnt a division between understanding socialism and
being politically aware. You cant separate the two.
The meeting clarified for me why the SEP has chosen the
war as the cornerstone of the partys message. What Nick
Beams was saying was that war is produced by capitalism and the
SEP wants to change the way in which the world operates. In that
sense, the SEP can oppose militarism because they are fighting
its root causes. I didnt understand that link at first.
I kept asking myself, why is it all about the war; arent
there other issues?
I come from South Africa, where a lot was promised and
there was a lot of struggle involving everyone, not just those
who are in power now. But nothing has been gained in terms of
the everyday person. Things have remained the way they always
were. We dont have signs anymore, saying you cant
sit on that bench, and that beach. But if you dont have
a car to get to the beach, you are excluded anyway, so whats
the point?
Zach, 19, who was also born in South Africa, attended the Marrickville
meeting.
I bumped into one of your representatives last week at
the university, went to an International Students for Social Equality
meeting and really liked what I heard, he said. And
I liked what Patrick OConnor and Nick Beams said tonight
because they told the truth about what is going on in the world
today and they explained socialist principles, which now make
more sense to me.
Zach said that a US-led war with Iran was inevitable and had
been since the invasion of Afghanistan. The United States
wants to take over one country after another. Your party has done
here what no one else has been able to and that is to answer some
pretty sticky questions about what is happening in the world and
why the United States is doing this now. What was explained in
tonights meeting was pretty perceptive on these questions
and rings true, he said.
Trevor, who also attended the Marrickville meeting, has been
reading the World Socialist Web Site since receiving a
leaflet at one of the antiwar demonstrations in 2003. He said
that the Liberal and Labor parties were not the answer to
the problems facing workers today. As was pointed out at tonights
meeting, they both support war, as do all the other minor parties
involved.
Asked to comment on Labors attempts to promote NSW state
premier Morris Iemma as an ordinary guy, Trevor, said:
Well he is an ordinary guy; very ordinary. In fact, theyre
all very ordinary guys and they have no interest or concern about
the working class. I must admit I havent had a lot of respect
for the official politicians for a very long time.
Trevor said that the US preparation for a military attack on
Iran was a major issue, not just in the NSW elections but
for everyone in the world today. This is particularly important
for youth who are going to be dragged into war, wherever it is.
When asked why these issues were being screened out of the
state election he replied: Because more and more people
would begin to understand that the two major parties have no answers
and will start to look somewhere else. The powers-that-be obviously
doesnt want to encourage that. This was obvious at the Newtown
Neighbourhood public meeting where they tried to restrict Patrick
OConnor to purely local issues.
See Also:
Socialism and the struggle against US
militarism
[6 March 2007]
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